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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
One hundred consecutive male patients undergoing elective inguinal herniorrhaphy were randomized to receive general, epidural or local anaesthesia, and the patterns of ventilation were studied before and after operation. General anaesthesia caused more
depression
of FEV1 and FVC than the other two methods, but no important arterial hypoxia or clinical chest complications ensued. One patients suffered minor staphylococcal wound infection, and one died of massive
pulmonary embolism
on the eleventh day.
...
PMID:Ventilatory capacity after three methods of anaesthesia for inguinal hernia repair: a randomized controlled trial. 702 96
During the period from 1961 to 1981, 40 pulmonary embolectomies were performed in 39 patients who were in extremis at the time of initiation of cardiopulmonary bypass. In a 460-bed hospital with more than 17,000 acute admissions and 4,000 operations per year, this small number represents the few patients who are potentially salvageable by urgent embolectomy. Preoperative angiography was performed in 57% of the cases, and in another ten patients suspected of having pulmonary emboli, angiography prevented unnecessary thoracotomy. Despite their moribund condition, 43% of the embolectomy patients lived. Excluding two patients with tumor occlusion of the pulmonary arteries and three patients with chronic cor pulmonale from old pulmonary emboli, the survival rate was 50%. Ten patients died because of hypoxemia and hypotension prior to initiation of cardiopulmonary bypass, and seven died of myocardial
depression
of multiple etiologies. Portable cardiopulmonary bypass affords the possibility of survival in moribund patients with acute massive
pulmonary embolism
. Preoperative angiography is recommended to guide appropriate surgical management.
...
PMID:Pulmonary embolectomy for acute massive pulmonary embolism. 708 65
Based on literature reports suggesting the possible incorporation of Tc-99m sulfur colloid (Tc-SC) into fibrin deposits, this study was undertaken to evaluate the potential of this radiopharmaceutical as an imaging agent in thromboembolic disease. Animal models of deep-vein thrombosis and
pulmonary embolism
were used. The mean thrombus-to-blood (T/B) uptake ratios were comparable for fresh and older thrombi (up to 72 hr). Thrombus uptake was significantly lower in a group of five control dogs that received pertechnetate instead of Tc-SC. Intravenous heparin administration (5,000 IU) 2 hr before injection of Tc-SC caused a
depression
in T/B ratios but did not totally block Tc-SC uptake. Gamma imaging with Tc-SC allowed demonstration of deep-vein thrombi, but imaging of pulmonary emboli as areas of increased activity was not satisfactory. This study supports the concept of thrombus detection with radiolabeled particles but not the extension of this principle to the imaging of pulmonary emboli.
...
PMID:Experimental evaluation of Tc-99m sulfur colloid as a potential imaging agent in thromboembolic disease: concise communication. 740 Aug 27
We studied 196 patients with suspicion of
pulmonary embolism
(PE) to evaluate the role of clinical pattern, with special reference to gender and age, in raising the suspicion. Results are that clinical and instrumental patterns, although not specific for PE, may show highly frequent symptoms and signs such as dyspnea (52%), chest pain (60%), enlargement of descending pulmonary artery (49%), diaphragmatic elevation (41%), enlargement of azygos vein (46%) and hypoxia (mean value 68 +/- 13 mm Hg) that allow to suspect PE in most patients and, therefore, to recruit more patients for diagnosis. Moreover, this study shows that gender and age may only partially influence the possibility of raising the suspicion of PE. Indeed, only hemoptysis is significantly (p < 0.02) more frequent in males; only pleuritic chest pain is significantly (p < 0.02) more frequent in youngs; few instrumental findings, such as 'sausage-like' descending pulmonary artery (p < 0.001), enlargement of cardiac shadow (p < 0.01), and hypoxia (p > 0.03) are significantly more frequent in elderly patients. Finally, a characteristic clinical and instrumental pattern of PE may allow to select a subset of patients at higher risk; in fact, previous PE, prolonged immobilization (p < 0.01) and thrombophlebitis (p < 0.001), sudden dyspnea and cough (p < 0.05), 'sausage-like' descending pulmonary artery (p < 0.001), diaphragm elevation (p < 0.02), enlargement of heart shadow, pulmonary infarction and Westermark sign (p < 0.001), S-T segment
depression
(p < 0.001), and hypoxia (p < 0.001) are findings significantly more frequent in patients with confirmed PE.
...
PMID:Gender, age and clinical signs in patients suspected of pulmonary embolism. 817 65
The results of 100 consecutive autopsy studies performed since the introduction and use of cyclosporine (1984 to 1991) in patients who died less than 2.5 months after cardiac transplantation were analysed to try to prevent this type of lethal damage. The lesions were complex but the causes of death may be classified as follows: 44 infections (20 aspergillosis, with 13 septicaemias and 7 predominantly pulmonary complications, 15 severe lung infections, 9 other infections including 7 pyogenic mediastino-pericarditis), 12 acute myocardial rejects, 14 pulmonary arteriolitis reflecting the fact that pulmonary resistances affect the results of cardiac transplantation, 13 non-infectious pericarditis, 17 immediate postoperative deaths (incompetent graft, DIVC). In the discussion, the authors underline the importance of pericardial damage, the direct cause of death in 13 cases but also present in most cases of infection when sometimes clinically confused with the diagnosis of "acute reject". Acute pancreatitis (over 10% of cases) were often labelled "septicaemic shock". Pulmonary involvement is one of the commonest complications related to infection and changes due to passive pulmonary hypertension related to the causal preoperative disease, by silent
pulmonary embolism
during the 3 months of cardiac failure before surgery and DIVC. Infection was the cause of death in nearly half of the early fatalities, and aspergillosis was particularly common whereas systematic prevention with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine has eliminated pneumocystosis for example. The management of immuno-
depression
varies from centre to centre and this is also a factor in the incidence of anatomical complications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Early fatal lesions after cardiac transplantation. Results of 100 autopsies]. 833 96
To contribute for making early diagnosis and treatment of acute
pulmonary embolism
(APE), we investigated on clinical pictures of 225 patients with APE. Common underlying factors were heart disease, prolonged bed rest, post-surgical state, thrombophlebitis, malignant tumor and post-catheterization state in this order. Dyspnea, chest pain, tachycardia and shock were frequently seen as initial symptoms and signs. Blood screening showed leukocytosis, hypoxemia, hypocapnia and elevated serum LDH. Electrocardiographic findings highly demonstrated were ST.T abnormalities, such as T inversion with ST elevation in V1-3, ST
depression
in V4-6 and sinus tachycardia. Chest X-rays showed diminished pulmonary vascular marking and pulmonary artery dilation. Right ventricular dilatation were frequently seen on 2-dimensional echocardiograms. Pulmonary artery pressure were elevated up to 49/20 (30) mmHg. Twenty-five percent of the patients died, and the recurrence was seen in 4%. Thus, as soon as APE is suspected by above clinical findings, definitive diagnosis should be obtained by the lung perfusion scan and pulmonary arteriography, then oxygen and thrombolytic agents should be given immediately to prevent the fatal outcome.
...
PMID:[Early diagnosis and management of acute pulmonary embolism: clinical evaluation those of 225 cases]. 835 37
The past and present clinical history of 13 patients with hemodynamic and angiographic diagnosis of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTPH) was reviewed in order to investigate the reasons for failure of resolution of acute
pulmonary embolism
(PE) and findings useful for diagnosis of CTPH. All patients had chest radiograph, ECG, arterial blood gas analysis and pulmonary perfusion scintigraphy performed. Clinical assessment demonstrated that no patient had diagnosis and treatment of the several retrospectively identified episodes of PE (from 1 to 8); the lack of diagnosis was due to underestimation of symptoms and signs such as dyspnea (85%), pleuritic chest pain (31%) or phlebitis (46%) that were present months or years earlier. Alternative diagnoses erroneously made were dyspnea of unknown origin (5 cases), left heart failure (4 instances) and pneumonia (2 cases). Once CTPH has developed, chronic dyspnea (92%) and substernal chest pain (100%) are almost always present: chest radiograph and ECG show signs of chronic hypertension such as enlargement of hila (100%), right heart sections (77%), azygos vein (46%) and P pulmonale (67%), T inversion on right precordial leads (75%), S-T segment
depression
(75%), respectively. Perfusion scintigraphy shows severe perfusion impairment (55.7% of the total vascular bed) paralleled by severe hypoxia (standard PaO2 = 49 +/- 14.1 mm Hg). In conclusion, patients with PE who develop CTPH are not diagnosed and thus untreated because clinical symptoms and signs of acute PE have not been recognized. If CTPH develops, clinical assessment (including simple and noninvasive techniques such as chest radiograph, ECG and blood gas analysis) may show a quite characteristic pattern useful for diagnosis.
...
PMID:From not detected pulmonary embolism to diagnosis of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension: a retrospective study. 846 23
Patients with
pulmonary embolism
may have no definitive predisposing factors for thrombi. The clinical entity of chronic
pulmonary embolism
is also uncertain. This study clarified the clinical characteristics of
pulmonary embolism
without definitive predisposing factors. During the last 10 years, 36 consecutive patients were diagnosed as having
pulmonary embolism
(mean age 61 years, female 75%). Twenty-four patients (67%) had definitive predisposing factors ("definitive" group). Patients without definitive predisposing factors had the following characteristics. The onset of symptoms was out-hospital and insidious. The main symptom was exertional dyspnea without acute episode compatible with an embolism. In four patients (33%) there was a delay of over 2 years form the onset of symptoms to the diagnosis. Three patients had been treated for
depression
. Thrombolytic therapy caused an inadequate fall in mean pulmonary artery pressure from 41 +/- 11 to 24 +/- 8 mmHg and in three patients it remained over 30 mmHg. Deep vein thrombosis were found in four of nine patients in whom venography were performed 10 days after thrombolytic therapy, but only one patient showed thrombus in the "definitive" group. During the convalescent stage, all patients were treated with prophylactic warfarin. Home oxygen therapy was indicated in three patients and an inferior vena caval filter was implanted in two patients. One third of patients with
pulmonary embolism
in our institute had no definitive predisposing factors. In these patients, even with thrombolytic therapy, recovery of pulmonary hypertension was often insufficient and deep vein thrombosis persisted. Clinicians should be aware of this disease to avoid undue delay in its diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Clinical characteristics of pulmonary embolism without definitive predisposing factors]. 898 56
The pulmonary complications remain the prime cause of morbidity and mortality in sickle cell disease. The pathogenetic mechanisms consists both of an alteration of the rheological properties of the blood, the existence of a hypercoagulability state and above all specific interactions between the abnormal sickle cells and the vascular endothelium and a dysregulation of the vascular reactivity in which nitrous oxide intervenes. The acute chest syndrome (ACS) is characterised by chest pain with dyspnoea and recent radiological abnormalities and it is an acute lung complication whose problem is one of aetiology. The infectious pneumonias are rarely documented. On the other hand, alveolar hypoventilation linked to infarcts of the thoracic ribs, thoracoabdominal trauma, subdiaphragmatic pain, the administration of analgesics causing respiratory
depression
, obesity or sleep disturbance are frequent causes of ACS. Bronchoalveolar lavage has revealed a frequency of fat emboli following infarcts in the long bones.
Pulmonary emboli
is rarely a cause. Pulmonary thrombosis is a serious complication, the diagnosis is difficult and is seen in a predisposed clinical setting. The treatment of ACS rests on controlled hydration and antibiotic therapy, oxygen therapy and controlled analgesic therapy. The indications for blood transfusion and for exchange transfusion merits a better evaluation. In the long term patients with sickle cell disease present with a failure of normal thoracopulmonary growth with a restrictive ventilatory defect and progressive diminution in the transfer factor of carbon monoxide with age. A history of ACS favours chronic lung disease. Pulmonary arterial hypertension is less frequent.
...
PMID:[The sickle cell anemia lung from childhood to adulthood]. 960 86
Electrocardiographic (ECG) findings of
pulmonary embolism
(PE) include S1Q3T3 pattern, right bundle-branch block, right-axis deviation, and T-wave inversion in medial precordial leads. We report other uncommon ECG changes associated with various symptoms during recurrent PE as documented by computed tomography (CT) scans in a single patients. An 83-year-old woman was admitted with PE secondary to deep venous thrombosis in the left leg. During episodes of chest pain, ECG showed QTc prolongation (480 ms) with new T-wave inversion in leads III, aVF, and V1-V3, and ST-segment
depression
in leads V5-V6. Despite adequate anticoagulant therapy, recurrent episodes of PE occurred in the hospital. When the patient experienced sudden chest tightness, ECG showed a new S-wave notch in lead V1 and clock-wise rotation with sinus tachycardia. She also experienced transient syncope with hypotension. At this time, ECG showed transient atrioventricular junctional rhythm followed by sinus arrest, and CT scan showed a new massive embolus in the main pulmonary trunk with right ventricular dilatation, as demonstrated by echocardiography. The mechanism responsible for QTc prolongation with ST-T changes, the S-wave notch in lead V1 with clockwise rotation, or atrioventricular junctional rhythm with sinus arrest during PE may be associated with myocardial ischemia, acute right ventricular overload, or vagal reflex, respectively.
...
PMID:Uncommon electrocardiographic changes corresponding to symptoms during recurrent pulmonary embolism as documented by computed tomography scans. 982 4
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